REVIEW 713: SUPER 30

From a Hindi film industry that has
for decades now barely acknowledged the existence of India’s caste system, it
is quite something to see two films rooted in caste discrimination – Article 15 and Super 30 – within a span of a fortnight. Let us take a minute to
celebrate that change.

The question now is this: should
we be so grateful to artists who bring up issues rarely visited by their
colleagues that we let their faux pas, prejudices, poor research and poor
storytelling pass? Or do we call them out on their follies in the hope that they
are genuinely invested in their chosen themes, and will try to do better next
time?

The answer is: say it like it is. Of course a star
as major and glamorous as Hrithik Roshan opting to play a character from a
lower caste is a turning point in this insular industry which has long assumed,
as it once did about women protagonists, that heroes from marginalised
communities can only yield tragic weepy tales that have no place in the
mainstream. What is lovelier still is that Super
30 is based on the uplifting story of a real-life achiever. That it comes
to us at a time when any critique of caste is slammed as being
“Hinduphobic” makes it courageous too.

No doubt these are laudable
starting blocks. But Super 30 dilutes
itself in multiple ways. First, the brown makeup used on Roshan for the role of
Anand Kumar signals a stereotypical understanding of what it means to be lower
caste, offering us Hindi cinema’s caste equivalent of the white Western world’s
brownface. “He doesn’t look Dalit” was a criticism levelled at Prakash Jha for
casting Saif Ali Khan as a Dalit in Aarakshan.
Those pointing fingers should have told us what that “look” is since Dalit is
not a race or ethnicity but a pan-India social categorisation signifying
extreme ostracism and a forced adherence to certain professions. If Team Super 30 was indeed convinced that
Hrithik’s light complexion would never be found on a member of a lower caste,
it is worth asking why they did not go in search of a dark-skinned actor
instead of bottles of brown make-up, because the caking up of a well-known face
is distracting, to say the least. And if their argument is that all they wanted
was for Roshan to resemble the man he is playing as closely as possible, well
then, videos and photographs of the real Anand Kumar will tell you that he
looks nothing like the Bollywood hottie with or without makeup, so that claim
does not hold water.

Second, while Super 30 is gutsy off and on with its
caste references, it is also simultaneously hesitant in addition to betraying a
limited understanding of this deeply entrenched social dynamic.

So, bravo for showing a character
from a dominant group proclaim in Anand Kumar’s presence that social divides
are written into ancient scriptures and epics, since this is in truth how upper
castes continue to justify their claims to supremacy (the Censor Board forced
the producer to dub over the word “Ramayan” in that scene, and what we hear is
the person saying “Rajpuraan”). Bravo for having a poor, lower-caste postman
tell a post-office employee named Trivedi to quit his fossilised thinking and
realise that we live in an age when talent, not heredity, will determine who
rules. Bravo for the poor man who describes an inconsiderate medico as a
“donation-waala doctor”, because those opposed to SC/ST reservations use
“quota-waala” as an epithet and claim that meritocracy is their only concern
but do not raise similar objections to academic institutions in which
privileged classes can buy admission. Bravo.

(Applause fades) There is no explanation
though for why Anand’s caste is never specified in the film but only implied
through conversations in more than one scene. It remains the elephant in the
room whose presence has been alluded to but not stated in black and white. That
Which Must Not Be Named. But why?

Writer Sanjeev Dutta also
confuses class with caste when he shows the snobbery of Anand’s upper-caste
girlfriend’s father melt away as soon as the boy starts making big money. The
point about caste is its permanence, the fact that you cannot rise up a ladder
and shrug off the label that was pasted on you at birth even if you exit
poverty and illiteracy through hard work. Considering that the Dad had already
had a conversation with Anand in which he condescendingly referred to “your people”,
it seems unlikely that this man would forget his contempt overnight because
that is not what we see happening in the real India.

Super 30 is based on the life of mathematician-educationist Anand Kumar from Bihar. This is a
highly fictionalised account, as you will gather if you read media reports
about Kumar starting from the 2000s. It is also an account that steers clear of
all question marks raised in the media about Kumar, but since those question
marks themselves are murky and require a thorough investigation by an unbiased
reporter on the ground, I am not going into a comparison between the film and
reality.

Roughly speaking, Anand in the
film, like the real guy, is a mathematical genius whose academic brilliance
gets him admission in Cambridge University. His impoverished family cannot
raise the funds to send him there though. A chain of circumstances leads Anand
to a coaching institute for IIT JEE aspirants where he becomes a star teacher
and starts raking in good money. However, he decides one day to give up his
increasingly comfortable life and set up a free coaching school for under-privileged children where he
will train 30 chosen ones for the IIT entrance exam each year, providing them
with food and a house for an entire year as he trains them. He calls it Super 30. This leads to a
clash between Anand and powerful players in the state’s coaching institute
racket.

With all its problems, there is a
certain poignance to the account of Anand’s early life as we witness the love
within his family despite their financial struggles, the endearing flirtations
between his father and mother, his father’s wisdom and mother’s joyousness, and
the malice of those who claim to care about the downtrodden but in fact only
care for their votes.

After Anand launches Super 30
though, the storytelling becomes as uneven as the film’s understanding of
caste, getting downright lacklustre in large portions. The director seems to
lose his grip on the narrative as it rolls along, and it does not help that
Roshan’s performance is patchy at best. This is not even counting the fact that
at 45, the actor is playing a character who is in his teens at the start of
this film and in his 20s through most of the rest of it. This is also not
counting the fact that Anand in the late 1990s is styled to look like a
character out of a K.L. Saigal movie.

Few Bollywood stars can summon up
pain in their eyes as Roshan can, but there is a tone and mannerism he used in
his performance as a mentally challenged youth in Koi Mil Gaya (2003) that creeps into his dialogue delivery and
occasionally even his facial expressions here in Super 30 too. It is a tone he has dipped into each time he has been
called to portray simplicity in his career – in earlier roles it usually came
up just in passing and was therefore tolerable, but it is hard to ignore in
this film in which simplicity is the cornerstone of his character.

Hrithik Roshan is a gorgeous
looking man but he has always needed a firm directorial hand to guide him. His
Dad Rakesh Roshan, Khalid Mohamed (Fiza),
Karan Johar (K3G), Ashutosh Gowariker
(Jodhaa Akbar) and Zoya Akhtar (Luck By Chance, Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara) have brought out the very best in him.
Vikas Bahl has not.

The supporting cast of Super 30 is better. Mrunal Thakur, who
was excellent in Tabrez Noorani’s Love
Sonia last year, is given little to do as Anand’s girlfriend here, but she
pulls off that little well. The child actors are saddled with unmemorable
characters that have no depth or
expanse, but show flashes of how good they might be in better written roles.
Aditya Srivastava is solid as Anand’s unscrupulous professional rival. Sadhana
Singh and Virendra Saxena are absolute darlings as Anand’s parents. And Pankaj
Tripathi as a corrupt politician manages to be both hilarious and menacing at
the same time.

Once the script and direction of Super 30 begin to wander all over the
place, there is no turning back. For a start, no one on the team seems to have
stopped to ask how Anand intended to sustain Super 30 after exhausting his
savings. The real Anand Kumar runs a parallel coaching centre from which he
earns high fees that he then pumps into his classes for the poor, but there is
no mention of it here nor of any other source of income, perhaps because that
coaching centre has been a subject of some controversy. The director’s lax grip
on the reins screams out most in the scene featuring the children singing the
song Basanti No Dance that was
clearly designed to be moving but is curiously emotionally cold.

Ajay-Atul’s music deserved a
sturdier platform. As things stand, it is one of the best things about Super 30. Basanti No Dance and Question
Mark have an attractive beat and rhythm. Jugraafiya, with its lyrics by the inimitable Amitabh Bhattacharya,
is entertaining. And the end credits roll on a haunting melody titled Niyam Ho.

Super 30 comes across as a project that
someone somewhere lost interest in at some point and then it all came apart.
What else but casualness can explain the misspelling of the production house’s
own name in the final credits?

Bahl’s new film is not
insufferable and soporific likeShaandaar, but it is misleading to
mention it in the same breath as Anubhav Sinha’s Article 15, as I did in the first paragraph of this review, without
a clarification. Article 15 is a
deeply affecting study of a police officer whose caste privilege has given him
the luxury of growing up ignorant about caste until it is rubbed in his face in
his adulthood, at which point he sets out to educate himself through
interactions with his colleagues and a Dalit activist. Caste should have been
omnipresent in Super 30 but by the
film’s second half has become almost an aside while the good folk battle
conventional Bollywood villains. Someone somewhere gave up on Super 30 a while back, and it shows.

1 comment:

I felt the makers messed up with the subject (which was promising), had the direction and the editing been good, the end product could have been much better. Hrithik did put up a good performance but his Bihari accent wasn't that convincing.

About Me

Anna MM Vetticad is an award-winning journalist, journalism teacher and author of the critically acclaimed bestseller The Adventures of an Intrepid Film Critic, an overview of the Hindi film industry presented through an account of a year in which she watched every single Bollywood film released in India’s National Capital Region. A journalist since 1994, she has worked with India Today, The Indian Express and Headlines Today. At HT she hosted her own interview show Star Trek which drew all India’s eminent entertainment personalities. While Anna has spent most of her career as a behind-the-scenes editorial person, she has also reported on most major Indian entertainment and lifestyle events and several international ones including Cannes and the Oscars, in addition to being the film critic for Headlines Today. She is currently reporting and writing for multiple publications on cinema and social issues with a focus on gender concerns. The Adventures of an Intrepid Film Critic is available on amazon.com, ebay.in, flipkart.com, ombooksinternational.com, ombooks.com, infibeam.com, homeshop18.com and dialabook.in among other websites, and in stores across India. Twitter: @annavetticad